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Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10. 20, 30 and
iO years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
May. 1945
(It was Wednesday)
Construction of a 10-mile sec
tion of Highway 99 as strategic
highway approved by War Pro
duction board.
From Arthur Perry' Ye
Smudge Pot column: The abbre
viation for the full name of the
San Francisco conference is
"UNCOIN" to the average Am
erican, it looks too much like
what's been going on the last
decade, and the nation can't
stand much more uncoining.
20 YEARS AGO
Mar 2. 1935
(It was Thursday)
Articles of incorporation filed
by Applegate Valley Protective
Stock association in effort to stop
cattle rustling.
Unexpected cold causes orch
ard heating in lower sections of
valley.
30 YEARS AGO
May 2. 1925
(It was Saturday)
From the Local and Personal
column: Fishermen in the Rogue
report that trout are taking the
fly to good advantage now and
that they are able to make some
good catches. The trout are ris
ing readily. Grants Pass
Courier.
The Eads brothers start con
struction of a business block on
South Fir st.
40 YEARS AGO
May 2, 1915
(It was Sunday)
The Ministerial association
votes to favor a police matron
for Medford.
Oregon Fruit company of Port
land contracts to operate Med
ford Warehouse company.
What's the Answer?
(Can You Get 4 of lha 7?)
Cepr. 1955. Editorial Rtsaarch Report
1. Job chances are better or
worse for skilled workers over
40 in this era of high employ
ment than in similar eras of the
past, or about the same?
2. President Eisenhower sup
ports statehood for Alaska, for
Hawaii, for both, or for neith
er? 3. Stocks of wheat in the U.S.
are now enough for about six,
twelve. 18 or 24 months' dom
estic needs? 1
4. Women dietitians and ther
apists are or aren't eligible for
commissions in the U. S. Armed
forces?
5. U. S. Sureme Court jus
tices must, like, the President,
have been born in the U.S., right
or wrong?
6. Some life insurance is car
ried in more than half or less
than half of all U.S. families?
7. Dorothy Bailey was the cen
ter of a big court case recently
as a federal employee, alleged
murderer. Government witness,
dress designer, or friend of play
boy Jelke?
The answers: 1. Worse. 2. Only
for Hawaii. 3. 24 months. 4. Are.
5. Wrong. 8 In more than half.
7. Federal employee.
The Dra Valley in French
Morocco grows more than 300
varieties of dates. The average
resident of the valley eats three
pounds of dried dates a day.
MAIL TRIBUNE
What's In a Name?
-4
Does America have a "capitalist" economy?
A writer in the current issue of Harper's magazine
claims, and with logic on his side, that we need a
new phrase to describe the way things are done in
this country.
In Europe, he claims, the word "capitalist" is a
dirty word, having connotations and meanings which
it has lost in America.
It IS thus, he says, when Americans talk affection-
ately of our "capitalist, free-enterprise economy,"
that Europeans react with a startling lack "of enthus
iasm. The word still connotes, to them, economic roy
alism, sweat shops, underpaid and oppressed work
ers, the privileges of wealth, and so on.
In America it means something different.
The writer believes we should do something to
counteract this impression, and he is convinced that
what we need is a new word to describe what we
have been calling "capitalism." ' -
LIOW do we describe our system which has, he says,
progressed "past Socialism?"
"Planning," he declares, is a word which has
pleasant connotations to Europeans, but unpleasant
ones to Americans. And yet, he maintains, it is plan
ning which has created something unique, something
new, something wholesome in America, although it is
seldom called just that.
What big corporation
ning forward for the ensuing year and decade? he
asks. And what businessman or farmer can make
plans without taking into account the plans of local,
state and federal government for taxes, for reclam
ation, for crop controls, for sustained yield, for buil
ding programs, for manpower (military and other)
needs?
AMERICA has succeeded
a biau ouwiai cwivi j U0iviv,c kJj planning
and by controls, but without calling them by those
names, he maintains.
The semantic difficulty
can be understood better, he said, when it is con
sidered that American businessmen, farmers, tax
payers practically everyone is subject to laws,
universally accepted, which Europeans know nothing
about.
They don't know about
security and exchange commission regulations, the
federal communications commission rules, the wage
and hour laws, social security laws, and the multi
tude of federal and state laws and regulations de
signed to curb the abuses of "capitalism," a system
now all but gone in actuality through these regula
tions, and which has been
no one has bothered to give
DERHAPS it would even add to our own under-
standing of ourselves if we acknowledged that
capitalism (as it was understood 50 or 75 years ago)
is dead in America, and that we have something
better.
Who can put a name to our economic system
which tells the truth, and which accurately describes
both the freedoms we enjoy and the regulations to
which we submit in the interests of the public wel
fare? E.A.
The Southern Barrier
Ten members of the San Francisco Chamber of
Commerce visited Medford last week, and during a
luncheon with the directors of the local chamber,
discussion brought out a lot of "gripes" which local
businessmen have about relationships with the Bay
City.
It all boiled down to two things: transportation
and communication.
I UMBERMEN were concerned about freight rates
" which put them at a disadvantage in shipping into
San Francisco (even though they can ship to the south
or east on a competitive basis with northern Calif
ornia lumber firms).
Drivers were concerned with the tortuous Sacra
mento river canyon highway south of Dunsmuir.
Airline passengers were concerned with the fact
that there is one flight per day less to the south than
there is to the north.
Would-be rail passengers were concerned that
there is no rail passenger service south from the
Rogue valley.
TT should be pointed out that the gripes were not
particularly bitter (except for those concerning
freight rates), but they did
animous opinion that traffic and business between
this area and the Bay region would be considerably
greater and more prosperous if these barriers were
eased.
The San Francisco delegation, a friendly and in
telligent group, promised to take these complaints
back with them to see if progress could be made in
knocking down the barriers to more extensive trade.
It may be that something concrete can be accom
plished. But if nothing more, we are sure the visitors
were made aware that Medford exists, and has much
to offer to California businessmen and vacationists.
Dennis Day To Have Rose Festival Role
Portland U.R) Dennis Day
has been signed for a starring
role in the 1955 Rose Festival's
musical extravaganzas Thursday
and Friday, June 9 and 10, ac
cording to an announcement
from the Rose Festival associa
tion. , '..I
Monday, May 1935
could exist without plan
in erecting a structure of
which bothers Europeans
our anti-trust laws, our
succeeded by something
a name to.
represent an almost un
E1A.
Date for the 47th annual Rose
Festival are June 8 to 12.
The two night musical shows
will be called "Starlight Sere
nade," and will include other
top-flight entertainers.
- Dead line for Sunday Claiaifiod if
at Boon Saturday.
Matter of Fact
ADLAI AND AVERELL
Washington The relation
ship between Adlai Stevenson
and New York's Gov. Averell
Harriman is the most interesting
Wi personal eaua-
tion in Ameri
can politics to
day. Stevenson
and Harriman
are at one and
the same time
close personal
4 friends and po
tential political
rivals.
Harriman
made his posi
Stewart Alsop
tion entirely
clear to Stevenson, before Ste
venson left for his carefully
timed sojourn in Africa. Harri
man told Stevenson," in effect,
not to worry about the nomina
tion if he wanted it, it was in
the bag. All he had to do was to
pass the word to five or six key
men including Harriman and
they would get behind him and
push.
But this time, Harriman said,
there could be' no indefinite de
lay. This time, in Harriman's
view, the -problem is not the
nomination but the election.
Harriman strongly believes
that the notion that Eisenhower
is unbeatable is a myth. But he
also believes, and has so coun
selled Stevenson, that in order
to beat Eisenhower, Stevenson
has got to start building for elec
tion day, not just after the con
vention next year, but almost
right away. Harriman has also
been completely frank with Ste
venson about his own role he is
a Stevenson man all the way if
Stevenson wants the nomination,
but if Stevenson does not, he will
try for it himself.
The implication of all this is
plain. At some unspecified point,
if Stevenson does not pass the
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
I suppose you've been reading
about the Eisenhower - Zhukov
ocrrespondence and, like
everybody else, have been. won
dering what these two old comrades-in-arms
said to each other
when they took their pens in
hand.
Were they conferring official
ly on larger affairs of the world,
such as finding ways and means
whereby Russia and the United
States can live in the same world
in more or less peaceful coexis
tence? Or were they just a couple of
old soldiers fighting the war
over again, as all old soldiers do
when they get together either
in person or by correspondence?
T WOULDN'T know.
" But here's a tale that comes
over the wires from Washington
one of those don't - quote - me-but-here's
what - really-happened
affairs that are so common in
these days:
The correspondence started,
the yarn goes, when Zhukov
wrote Ike requesting the return
of a Russian boy who voluntarily
went over to the West in Ber
lin in late March,, of this year.
Zhukov told Eisenhower that he
(Zhukov) recognized him (Ike) as
a great humanitarian.
Laying it on with a trowel,
Zhukov said in his letter that he
knew the President would rea
lize the anxieties of the Russian
boy's family and would do his
best to lighten these anxieties.
And so on.
TKE GOT the letter.
Presumably he leaned back
in his chair and scratched his
head, and possibly said to him
self. "What's Grigori (his. full
name is Grigori Konstantino-
vich Zhukov) up to now?"
At any rate .(according to "in
formants," who are a numerous
tribe in Washington) Ike- is said
to have replied that he could
recognize the anguish of the
(Communist) Russian boy's fami
ly. But
He is said to have added
He hoped that Zhukov could
realize THE ANXIETY OF
AMERICAN FAMILIES OF
AMERICAN MEN WHO ARE
BEING HELD IN JAILS OF
COMMUNIST CHINA. .
T HOPE that is exactly what
happened.
And 1 can't help thinking that
maybe it IS what happened.
TKE HAS been around a lot. He
has had ' a lot of propositions
put up to him propositions
With a CATCH to them. He has
had plenty of expierience in
shing people up. He knows a
baited hook when he sees one.
And
When he acts on his own judg
ment, in matters in which he has
had experience He nearly al
ways DOES THE RIGHT
THING.
TT IS only when he has fancy
political propositions put up
to him by skilled politicians, and
realizing that politics is a field
in which he hasn't specialized
relics on the advice given to him
by the politicians by whom he is
surrounded that our President
sometimes seems to fumble.
In the critically important
fields of soldiering and inter
national diplomacy in which his
life has been spent, his instincts
are nearly always sound ' and
wholesome. , " j
HLJ
By Joseph Alsop
word, Harriman himself will
"go." To "go" in Harriman's
case, simply means giving a ta
cit green light to Carmine De
Sapio, able chieftain of Tammany-Hall
and Harriman's prin
cipal political backer.
JUST when the point of deci-
sion will come is uncertain.
But it could come rather soon.
DeSapio reportedly favors start
ing quietly to build a Harriman
organization by early autumn, if
Stevenson does not pass the
word before then. Meanwhile,
De Sapio is keeping open his
lines of communication to such
key figures in the party as May
or David Lawrence, of Pitts
burgh, and Sen. Earle Clements,
of Kentucky, who has the role
of honest broker, between the
northern and southern wings of
the party.
Thus provided Stevenson
does not let it be known that he
is available fairly soon after he
returns Harriman must be tak
en seriously as a possible con
tender. Already, he is certainly
being taken a lot more seriously
than in 1952, when he first tried
for the nomination and did sur
prisingly well.
The simple fact of being Gov
ernor of New York has added a
cubit or so to his political sta
ture. So has publication of the
Yalta papers, which show him
in an admirable light there is
a certain irony in the fact that
the only man to benefit politi
cally from the Yalta papers is a
New Deal Democrat. Those close
to him say that beinz elected
governor of the biggest state
has also "done something" to
Harriman. His old diffidence is
gone, he has discovered in him
self a natural bent for politics,
and he is immensely enjoying
his job.
Harriman is an essentially un
complicated man. When he
wants something he goes to work
to get it and usually succeeds.
Thus his advice to Stevenson, to
nail down the nomination and
start right away working to win
the election, is perfectly in char
acter. It is precisely what Harri
man would do in Stevenson's
position. Indeed, if it were not
for Stevenson, his friends be
lieve that Harriman would be
out beating the bushes for sup
port right now.
But. Stevenson is a much more
complex character. Those who
know him well believe that he
really wanted the nomination
very badly last year or at least
that he very badly wanted to be
sure that he could have it if he
wanted it. Then the election by
a smashing majority of his friend
and protege. Paul Butler, as
chairman of the Democratic Na
tional committee, proved to Ste
venson that he couid have tha
nomination by lifting a finger
At that point or so friends of
his believe he 'began asking
himself, in his introsnective.
Wilsonian way. whether he real
ly wanted to run after all.
TF STEVENSON continues to
ask himself this question with
out coming up with
positive answer, the odds are
that Harriman, perhaps even
with Stevenson's blessing, will
make the try. With New York's
huge bloc of delegate votes go
ing to Harriman instead of Ste
venson, Stevenson might then
fail of nomination on the early
balloting and a front runner
must win early or not at all.
Yet there are those who be
lieve that a Harriman candidacy
is just what Stevenson needs to
copper-rivet the nomination. Ao
cording to this reasoning, the
southerners and conservatives
distrust Harriman's views and
would therefore flock to Steven
son. Obviously it is much too
early to predict the effect of a
Harriman candidacy. But at
least it will be interesting to
watch the relationship between
these two remarkable men, as it
develops in the months to come.
(Copyright, 1955,
New York Herald Tribune Inc.)
Congress of Freedom
Urges UN Withdrawal
San Francisco (U.R) Dele
gates to the Congress of Freedom
were en route home today after
adopting a resolution urging the
immediate withdrawal of the
United States from the United
Nations.
The congress, a coalition of
500 right wing organizations,
roundly criticized the United Na
tions and its member agencies in
the final session of a' six - day
convention which ended here
Saturday.
' The resolution said that the
United Nations and its member
agencies were "totally ineffect
ual in prompting "the cause of
liberty. We respectfully urge the
Congress of the United States,
the President of the United
States and the people of the
United States to sever all con
nection with the United Nations
and oust this foreign, un
American, respository of poli
tical and potential might."
ACCOUNTANTS TO MEET
Corvallis (U.R) The 1955
convention of the Oregon As
sociation of Public Accountants
will be held here June 23 to 25,
C. Hoy Briggs, general conven
tion chairman, announced over
the week end. -
Is That So?
By Eugana Burnt
Hangar-Naturalist
Time in for our outdoor quiz.
Score five and you are an ex
pert; four is mighty good; three
fair to middling. Answers fol
low questions.
1. As high jumpers go, man
isn't so bad with a record of
6 feet 11V4 inches. But several
animals do better. Among these
mammals lion,, jackrabbit,
American elk, African klip-
springer and horse, the follow
ing records have been recorder:
20 feet, 8Ji feet, nine feet, eight
and seven. Link these high
jumpers with the appropriate
animal.
2. With summer coming on,
temperatures of 110 to 130 de
grees Fahrenheit will be record
ed. But what is the hottest body
temperature a' human can with
stand and still live? 100 degrees
Fahrenheit? 105? 110? 115? 120?
3. No doubt you know the
butcher's name for the "desex
ed" rooster, but what do you call
a sexless hen
4. What male fish attaches
himself to the head, side or back
of a female and lives off, her
predigested food for the rest of
his unnatural lifetime?
5. The gestation periods of an
imals varies enormously. Natur
ally it is impossible to remem
ber the exact number of days
but an outdoorsman should know
approximately. Of these varied
groups, which is the shorter?
Chipmunk or hamster? Bear or
cow? Camel or horse? Hippopot
amus or fisher? African ele
phant or whale?
ANSWER: 1. A jackrabbit has
been known to jump seven feet
high; ,a lion, eight feet; a horse,
8Vi; an American elk, nine; and
an African klipspringer, 20
in fact over 20.
2. The hottest temperature the
average human being could sur
vive is a little over 105, but a
few. humans have survived tem
peratures of 110.
3. Capon is the name of the de
sexed rooster; poulard, the hen.
Incidentally, a desexed rabbit is
also called a capon, why I'll
never know.
4. The angler fish.
5. The hamster with 16V4 days
has a shorter gestation than the
chipmunk with 28; bear 180-210
as against the cow's 280-285;
horse wita 330 days against the
camel's 390-406; the great hip
popotamus 240 days as against
the little fisher's 338-358; the
whale, around 360 days, as
against the African elephant's
607-660.
(Released by McClure
Newspaper Syndicate)
Free: By special arrangement
with the editors of the Encyclo
pedia Americana, my panel of
judges will award each week to
the reader who sends me the
best question on nature and wild
life a complete 30-volume set
of this world-famous reference
work in a handsome Sealcraft
binding. Each week, new ques
tions will be considered. Sorry, I
simply can't answer your many
friendly letters. Please address
your questions to: IS THAT SO!
care of Medford Mail Tribune,
box 575, Sausalito, Calif.
Peron Asks ; Decision..
On Church vs. State
Buenos Aires, Argentina (U.R)
President Juan D. Peron Sun
day called for a decision by the
Argentine people on whether the
Roman Catholic Church and the
state should be separated or
whether the church "must go."
"The problem boils down to a
decision which must be taken by
the people. And the people and
their representatives must have
the last word," Peron told a May
Day rally.
"If they decide that they (the
church) must stay, they wiU
stay. If they decide thai there
must be separation, they will
separate. But if the people de
cide that they must go, they will
go," Peron said.
Eisenhower Visits
With 'Mother of Year
Washington (U.R) Presi
dent Eisenhower, one of seven
children, today wished the
"Mother of the Year" who is the
mother of eight "many: more
years of happiness.
P r e s i d ent Eisenhower also
talked over big family problems
today with Mrs.. Lavina Chris-
tensen Fugal, 75, Pleasant Grove,
Utah.
Mrs. Fugal described her visit
with the President "the thrill of
a lifetime."
PRESIDENT ELECTED
Corvallis (U.R) Oregon
chanter of the National Council
of Teachers met here Saturday
and elected Marian Zollinger,
language supervisor of Portland
schools, president ......
Successful
Faces Loss
As Italian
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Foreign Analyst
Premier Mario Scelba has
been so successful in fighting
Italy's Communists that he is
likely to lose
his job m a
couple of
weeks. f
First as min
ister of inter
ior, then as
prime minis
ter, Scelba has
been a symbol
of m i 1 i t ant
anti - Commu
nism for eight
years.
But now the
Cbarles McCann
Communist Party is on the down
grade. It is losing strength in
membership. It also is losing its
grip on the leadership of the big
Italian labor unions. -
Bank Official and
Abductor Killed
In Getaway Crash
Kampsville, 111. (U.R) A kid
naped bank official and one of
his abductors were killed today
when a captured getaway car
crashed in an attempt to escape
a posse.
The early morning melodrama
began when two gunmen, plan
ning to rob the Kampsville bank,
made their way into the home
of cashier Harry Waldheuser, 63.
,A neighbor saw lights go off
in the home and, when she in
vestigated, spotted a strange man
in the door of the Waldheuser
home.
She gave the alarm and 30
Kampsville residents and police
men surrounded the house where
Waldheusen and his wife were
held captive.
Getaway Car Demanded
The gunmen demanded a get
away car. threatening to kill the
couple. When the car was pro
vided the' gunmen forced Wald
heuser and his wife :' :to it. They
sped down the highway until the
car turned over on a curve:
State police said two bullets
were found in . Waldheuserm's
body, indicating he might have
been killed before the crash oc
curred.
Also killed was Thomas Un
derwood, 44, Washington Park,
111. ' " ' '
The other gunman, Clifford
Hubbard, 26, St. Louis, end
Waldheuser's wife were taken
to Carrollton, 111., hospital. Mrs.
Waldheuser wasi reported in
critical condition.
State police said Underwood
and Hubbard had originally
planned to force Waldheuser to
open the bank vault for them.
Nuclear Explosion
Again Postponed
Las Vegas, Nev. (U.R) "Ope
ration Cue," the nuclear detona
tion designed to demonstrate de
fenses of American cities against
atomic attack, was postponed for
the seventh straight day today
by unfavorable weather condi
tions. Hopes of setting off the device
in its tower a few blocks north
of Survival Town on Yucca Flat
today were dashed Sunday when
meteorologists found conditions
were adverse, probably due to
wind and clouds.
Another weather evaluation
session was scheduled at tne
Atomic Proving Ground late this
afternoon but a spokesman warn
ed in advance that "it does not
look favorable for firing Tuesday
morning."
The tapir is the largest land
animal of the South American
jungle..
Frank Perl
FINER
FUNERAL
SERVICES
ia every pries rant.
Scelba T
of Job
Premier
Hence the Red menace, which
loomed so large in Italy -after
World War II, has becomt re
mote. ' '
Internal Party Trouble
The Christian Democratic
Party, of which Scelba is a
founding member, can afford to
wage internal feuds instead of
sticking together to fight
Communism. Also, it has lost
some of its old anti-Red crusad
ing appeal to the voters.
Amintore Fanfani long been
regarded as an aspirant to Scel
ba'sjob. But the latest threat to Scelba
came on Friday when Giovanni
Gronchi, Christian Democratic
president of the Chamber of
Deputies was elected president
of Italy for a seven-year term.
Gronchi en Left
Gronchi is the leader of what
is called the left wing of the
party, though he is anti-Communist.
There also is a right wing.
Scelba is a party middle-of-the-roader.
The "left" wing wants to seek
the support of the left wing So
cialist group of Pietro Nenni,
who is a fellow traveler with the
Communists. The right wing
wants to seek the support of
right wing parties, including tha
Monarchists.
Scelba Must Resign
Scelba openly and bitterly
fought Gronchi's candidacy for
the presidency.
Gronchi will take office May
11. Next day, under the Consti
tution, Scelba must submit his
resignation. Normally this would
be merely a formality and he
would be asked to form a new
government.
But Gronchi is expected to ac
cept the resignation of his fellow
party leader and name somebody
else premier.
. If that happens, the Chris
tian Democratic feud will be em
bittered, and the only winners
can be the extremists, left or
right.
Fairies Will Retire
As US Stebf Chairman
Hoboken, N.J. (U.R)- Ben
jamin F. Fairless, whose ' first
job was selling newspapers at
the age of five, announced to
day he is stepping down as
chairman of U.S. Steel Corp.,
the world's biggest steelmaker.
Fairless, chairman for the past
three years, reaches the retire
ment age of 65 tomorrow. ,
Directors of the $3,348,000,000
company are expected to'::meet
tomorrow to name a successor.
Fairless will remain as a director
and a member of the Finance
committee.
God Reaches Out
Geo. N. Taylor -
Peter, the Apostle, is telling
Capt. Cornelius, a man of. Cae
sar's Army, as to Christ Of a
sudden, Cornel
ius and his
friends there
present, break
in on .Peter
They speak in
tongues of Red
men and Black;
of Browh men
men and white.
God wants the
3aved to know
that he is tak
ing out of all
races a neoDle
for himself. Christ took the sins
of all to clear them with God.
The one sin now between you
and God is whether you . take
Christ as the Lord and Saviour
who died for vou. Accent" Him
and Judgement is out and eter
nal life is in. For God so loved
you that he gave his Only-Born
Son, that if you shpuld believe
in Him you would not perish
but have eternal life. Having
come into God's family, then by
Bible and Prayer, Grow Up.
This Message sponsored by a
Beaverton family. Adv. :
Since 1900
Mortuary
o
Phone 2-6675-
o
II
W
PERL